Cape Cà Mau

Ca Mau is southern point province of the country, has three sides with 307 km sea coast. Bounded by Kien Giang in the north, Bac Lieu in the eastern, eastern and southeastern in the East Sea, west and southwest is the Gulf of Thailand. Ca Mau is the new land, including alkaline soil, salty soil, peat land and alluvial soil makes fertile fields. Ca Mau has network of interlacing rivers, with 7 main rivers: Ông Đốc, Bảy Háp, Cái Lớn, Gành Hào, Dầm Dơi, Trèm Trẹm, Bạch Ngưu. Ca Mau has many rivers and canals network entangle so travel by small boats and transportation is very convenient...

To Ca Mau Cape, tourists to visit national landmark coordinates, watching the forest, the sea, to contemplate evening clouds try to hide out on the immense ocean airspace

From Ca Mau headland, tourists can see Hon Khoai group of islands in the sea, which is 20km far from mainland. This is a beautiful group of islands including Tuong Islet (Hòn Tượng), Sao Islet (Hòn Sao), Kho Islet (Hòn Khô), Lon Islet (Hòn Lớn), Doi Moi Islet (Hòn Đồi Mồi). The biggest and highest islet is Khoai Islet (Hòn Khoai), which is about 4km2 wide and its top is 318m high, where the important lighthouse peak of Eastern Sea belonging to Thai Lan Bay locates. Especially, Hon Khoai has many sources of freshwater and it often supplies thousands of fishing boats with this. The specialties of the Alluvial ground of Mui headland are blood arca and hair arca. The local people catch arcas when the tide is as low as a surfboard on the mud-yard.

Cu Lao Cham is home to a wide range of land and marine fauna and flora, with many the species listed as endangered

Cu Lao Cham

Ca Mau river

Trem river
 
U Minh Ha forest

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